Contracts, Specifications, and Law for EngineersMcGraw-Hill, 1971 - 532 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 156
... determine what unit stress and safety factor are to be used . Again , if the engineer is using concrete in his structure , he is the one to determine whether that concrete is to have a twenty - eight - day ultimate compressive strength ...
... determine what unit stress and safety factor are to be used . Again , if the engineer is using concrete in his structure , he is the one to determine whether that concrete is to have a twenty - eight - day ultimate compressive strength ...
Page 183
... determined by the Engineer . The mark- ings shall be cuts one - half ( 2 ) inch in depth , and they shall be properly rounded or chamfered with an approved edging tool . The engineer has to determine only where the markings shall be ...
... determined by the Engineer . The mark- ings shall be cuts one - half ( 2 ) inch in depth , and they shall be properly rounded or chamfered with an approved edging tool . The engineer has to determine only where the markings shall be ...
Page 493
... determine the type of contract to be used for a given con- struction project ? On what basis should he determine it ? For a unit - price contract : ( a ) How are the quantities which are given in the proposal form determined ? ( b ) Are ...
... determine the type of contract to be used for a given con- struction project ? On what basis should he determine it ? For a unit - price contract : ( a ) How are the quantities which are given in the proposal form determined ? ( b ) Are ...
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Common terms and phrases
acceptance accord and satisfaction action actual agent agreement application approval arbitration architect assume ASTM authority basis bid price bid shopping bidder bond breach building cause circumstances claim clause cofferdams compensation complete concrete condition consideration construction contracts contract clauses contract documents contract drawings contractor contributory negligence corporation cost court damages defects defendant duty enforce engineer engineer's entitled equipment erection estimate example excavation extra furnished illustration injury intended interest involved liability liquidated damages lump-sum materials matter means ment necessary negligence obligation operations owner particular partner partnership party patent payment performance performance bond person plaintiff plans prepared principal promise promisor proposal form quantities real property reasonable regarding responsible result rule specifications statute steel stipulated structure subcontractor tion tort tract tractor ultra vires unit prices unit-price contract unless West Virginia Turnpike witness workmanship